The Court of Appeal in Putrajaya has struck out an appeal by the Johor
Baru City Council (MBJB) over the demolition of an Orang Asli chapel,
describing the application as an abuse of the court process.
The
three-member bench headed by Justice Syed Ahmad Helmy Syed Ahmad, along
with Abdul Wahab Patail and Abdul Aziz Abdul Rahim, was unanimous in
the decision.
The court also ordered MBJB to pay RM10,000 in costs.
In September 2010, the Johor Bahru High Court had ordered the MBJB to pay damages to Khalip Bachik, Kelah Lah and 49 others of Kuala Masai, Johor, following the demolition of their chapel.
Khalip
had filed the civil suit in December 2008 against the MBJB, Johor Land
and Mines Department and the Orang Asli Affairs Department (JHEOA).
The
MBJB failed to file affidavits in defence despite reminders being sent,
and then failed to enter an appearance when the hearing dates were
fixed. As a result, the council was ordered to pay damages.
It appeared alone in its appeal today. The other two appellants will have their application heard next week.
The
council had claimed that the suit had been filed under the ‘Johor Bahru
Town Council’ and not ‘Majlis Bandaran Johor Bahru’. Hence, it was not
bound by the order imposed by the Johor Bahru High Court.
Khalip's
lawyers argued to strike out the application, saying the appeal proper
was incompetent and that the memorandum of appeal was defective. This
made the appeal frivolous, vexatious and an abuse of the court process.
The Orang Asli were represented by Steven Thiru and Aron Matthews, while Roger Tan and CP Lee appeared for the appellants.
Permission given for place of worship
Khalip
and others are of Orang Asli Laut descent and members of the Orang Asli
Christian congregation. They were originally residents of Kampung Orang
Asli Stulang Laut.
They received a directive to move to Kampung
Orang Asli Kuala Masai from the Johor Bahru City Council in 1993 on the
ground that the site they occupied was to be developed.
Khalip
and Kelah claimed that the JHEOA director-general had given them an
assurance that they could build a place of worship at the new
settlement, and had done so upon relocation in 2003.
When the
demolition was carried out in 2005, the state failed to show any court
order or proof that the chapel was sitting on state land.
Eight of the 20 families living in Kampung Orang Asli Kuala Masai are of the Christian faith.
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